Terry Glavin on telling lies about Aisha *

Aug 23rd, 2010 | Filed by

Reactionary scum are reactionary scum, the world round.… Read the rest



Lauryn Oates on Day of Action Against Stoning *

Aug 23rd, 2010 | Filed by

How does one write a law mandating burying a woman up to the neck and throwing jagged stones at her head while she screams through a death by torture?… Read the rest



AI urges Saudis not to sever a spinal cord *

Aug 23rd, 2010 | Filed by

A court in Tabuk asked hospitals about cutting a man’s spinal cord to carry out the punishment of qisas requested by the injured victim.… Read the rest



Do you believe in Zeus? *

Aug 23rd, 2010 | Filed by

Kali? Athena? Loki?… Read the rest



Phil Plait on reactions to his “don’t be a dick” speech *

Aug 23rd, 2010 | Filed by

Oddly enough, many of them pointed out the lack of evidence and examples. Hey there are lots, ok?!… Read the rest



Jerry Coyne on Phil Plait’s “don’t be a dick” speech *

Aug 23rd, 2010 | Filed by

It reminds him of “Tom Johnson.” Who, exactly, are all these people who call their opponents baby rapers?… Read the rest



Azar Majedi on political Islam *

Aug 23rd, 2010 | Filed by

At the Toronto conference on the effect of the globalization of political Islam on women’s rights.… Read the rest



Solidarity

Aug 23rd, 2010 1:25 am | By

Hurry up and get back to blogging, 1.5 of you exclaim, we’re jonesing here. Very well. Since the vagaries of jet lag this time are working even on the westbound leg, and waking me up after three hours of sleep where normally I just crash and sleep for 8 or 9 hours on getting home – I’ll oblige.

First there was this seminar, which you heard about beforehand, the one that started 3 hours after I landed. A lot of it was Q and A, and it was rather like facing an audience of mind-readers. They all seemed to know exactly what I was getting at, and to feel the same way about it, and to have illustrative stories … Read the rest



Dolls repainted in burqas – joke or criticism? *

Aug 23rd, 2010 | Filed by

Artist Bronwen Gray, who designed the dolls, saw the anonymous repainting of her work in political terms.… Read the rest



Prodigal something or other

Aug 22nd, 2010 6:31 pm | By

Hello, I’m back – after 19 hours of travel. I left the hotel at about 7:20 this morning and got home at about 5:30 p.m. which was 2:30 a.m. Stockholm time. You see what I’m getting at. 7:20 Sunday morning to 2:30 Monday morning, on the road. It’s a bit fatiguing.

But never mind that. I had the most brilliant, incredible time – it was the best ever. I met all these terrific, brave women…

like Sara Mohammed of Never Forget Pele and Fadime –

like Sara Mats Rasmussen who burned a hijab in Norway on Women’s Day 2009 and has a regular column in Aftenposten

and many more. And that’s quite apart from what a great place Stockholm is.… Read the rest



Saudi role-reversal comedy irritates men *

Aug 18th, 2010 | Filed by

A woman takes four husbands. Imams are not amused.… Read the rest



Totalitarian atheism

Aug 18th, 2010 8:33 am | By

Barney Zwartz channels Mark Helprin (via an article from an anthology titled New Threats to Freedom. It’s the usual atheist-hating sludge pretending to wit: everything is reversed: it’s not religion that is conformist and coercive, good heavens no, it is that pesky dogmatic militant belligerent ‘my way or the highway atheism.’

Really. Really. I know I’ve said this before, but does Barney Zwartz never go into a bookstore? Does Mark Helprin? I was in the University bookstore here a couple of days ago, and the atheist empire has gotten smaller as well as less visible. It used to take up a good chunk of one shelf, so maybe about 2′, at about chest level, under a sign that said Religious … Read the rest



Telegraph poisons the well *

Aug 18th, 2010 | Filed by

By using the epithet “Dr Death” in the headline.… Read the rest



Militant atheists crush freedom *

Aug 18th, 2010 | Filed by

Mark Helprin is worried about “the rise of anti-religious orthodoxy.”… Read the rest



Cue Vera Lynn

Aug 17th, 2010 5:00 pm | By

Okay I’m off. Have to make sure I have everything I need, and do various other chores. Take care of yourselves, drink your Ovaltine. I’ll be back Sunday.… Read the rest



Proud ‘n’ patriarchal

Aug 17th, 2010 4:11 pm | By

James Fergusson says everybody should calm down and not get in such a swivet about women being treated like rebellious livestock in Afghanistan.

This does not mean the west should stand by in silence. On the contrary, it is our duty to go on arguing the case for gender equality and to keep Afghans engaged in that old debate. But we have no right to be shrill…

No right to be “shrill”? Why not? Why doesn’t anybody have a right to be “shrill” about gross cruelty and vindictiveness and oppression?

Well because we don’t understand, Fergusson says.

It might help if we understood the Taliban better. The harshness of the punishments they sometimes mete out only seems incomprehensible to the

Read the rest


Mohammed Mostafaei talks to the BBC *

Aug 17th, 2010 | Filed by

He says his long campaign for human rights and respect for the rule of law will continue, whether he’s inside Iran or in exile.… Read the rest



“They think they can do anything to women”

Aug 17th, 2010 | By Maryam Namazie
Join 28 August action of 100 cities against stoning   Hello   Thanks so much for your support of the campaign to save Sakineh Mohammadi Ashtiani from death by stoning and execution. The public outcry is what has kept her alive so far. When her 22 year old son Sajjad first wrote an open letter asking people everywhere to intervene there was no legal recourse left and she was to face imminent death by stoning for ‘adultery.’   In another letter written a few days ago, Sajjad reiterates Ashtiani’s innocence and says: ‘What sort of justice is this?’ (http://iransolidarity.blogspot.com/2010/08/sakineh-ashtianis-son-do-not-let-her-be.html).   The Islamic regime in Iran is doing everything it can to kill Ashtiani and push back the international campaign. The regime has… Read the rest


The bible is useful for our day-to-day challenges

Aug 17th, 2010 11:43 am | By

Lord Mackay of Clashfern is a funny guy. He’s a We Wee Free, and he thinks Scots courts should use the bible to help them out with the law stuff.

Mackay, who is also the current Lord Clerk Register, the oldest surviving “Great Office of State” in Scotland, now acts as honorary president of the Scottish Bible Society (SBS), and has invited sheriffs and judges to refamiliarise themselves with biblical principles and act accordingly when presiding over court cases…

“I believe the teaching of the Bible is vitally important for guidance in daily living for all of us.“The…modern version is especially useful in dealing with our day-to-day challenges.

“If we use it in this way we will soon learn

Read the rest


Ray Kurzweil does not understand the brain *

Aug 17th, 2010 | Filed by

PZ explains why it’s much, much more complicated than Kurzweil thinks.… Read the rest